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The 15-Minute City concept gains tracking.

The 15-Minute City Concept Gains Traction

The-15-Minute City concept is gaining traction around the world as a placemaking tactic and means to enhance quality of life.   Although “city” is used in this coined term, this planning concept is more about a focus on livable neighborhoods and districts.

 

The “15-minute city” is a term for urban design and master planning wherein it is possible to meet the basic “needs of living” within a 15-minute walk or bike ride from a person’s home.  The needs of living include such services and amenities as:

 

  • Places of work, or, at least a coworking venue;
  • Grocers;
  • Pharmacies;
  • Schools for children, youth;
  • Health care or medical facilities, or simply, doctor and dentist offices;
  • Recreation, leisure and/or green spaces; at least a pocket or linear park;
  • Cultural venues;
  • Mass transit accessibility;
  • Affordable housing is assumed;
  • Flexible zoning to allow places with different day-part uses, such as local school facility that can be a community gathering place at night or on weekends; and
  • Places of worship are seldom mentioned as part of the 15-Minute City concept, but such places may be among the most successful community-building forces that have existed.

 

 

The planning term was first coined by by Prof. Carlos Moreno, a professor at Sorbonne University (Paris, France).  Prof. Moreno is the director of entrepreneurship and innovation at The Sorbonne.  Though popularized by the professor, the 15-Minute City concept itself  has been explored in major cities throughout the world from Melbourne to Portland, prior to its burgeoning popularity as an planning concept.

 

During 2020, the 15-Minute City concept has surged in interest as a sturdy planning concept alongside the increasing acceptance of coworking facilities and communities.   Coworking venues situated in close proximity to homes simply adds an additional destination within a 15-minute “neighborhood” that is vital within a 15-minute radii.

 

The 15-Minute City concept is a multi-faceted placemaking tactic.

Another aspect of making the 15-Minute City concept workable is the presence of affordable housing within each 15-Minute City cluster.  Many neighborhoods and districts around the world may work well for most required services and work places, but do not have the array of housing choices necessary.

 

Integrating the 15-Minute City concept with allied planning concepts is particularly interesting to local governments charged with numerous quality of life objectives and economic development initiatives.   A 15-Minute City imperative, as an example, is also deemed helpful in reducing the use of fossil fuels (vehicles), fighting carbon emissions, and thereby fighting climate change.  Also, applying the 15-Minute City thresholds of accessibility also advances the objectives for some groups in reversing local zoning codes to allow increased affordable housing options and thereby, more diversity, inclusion, and social justice.

 

The 15-Minute City concept has created such interest that purpose-built apps have been created to evaluate any particular location for 15-Minute City thresholds. Here Technologies (Eindhoven, Netherlands) is one such company that has created this kind of threshold’s map to answer the question – Do You Live in a 15-Minute City? We expect that the 15-Minute City parameters and software applications that track such notions, will join similar concepts as a niche investment asset class among those pursuing environmental, social, and governmental investments (so-called ESG Investing).

Strategic Planning Consultants - MENA Region Project Consultants

Strategic Plan for Social Endowment Program

Strategic plan for social endowment program, to encourage income diversity, wealth accumulation, entrepreneurism, and economic opportunity for all.  The plan was prepared in collaboration with the Social Entrepreneurship Consortium Inc (“SECI”).

 

The strategic planning process and related ideation and resulted in the creation of the “Social Entrepreneurship Endowment & Development Fund (SEED).”   The SEED program seeks to encourage diversity in income and wealth accumulation, to foster entrepreneurism, and to promulgate vital economic prospects for children everywhere.

 

The SEED program employ a powerful economic approach to investing, that prioritizes vital social constituencies as stakeholders, more directly than through traditional philanthropy, what is referred to as a “philanthropy first” approach.  “Philanthropy First” investing says simply, make the social commitment by including community stakeholders at the outset of investing, so that the positive results of a successful enterprises are not discretionary with primary social benefit being at an end state (the retirement or passing of the enterprise’s founder) as is the case now. Why not instead make the social commitment part of the operating scheme of the enterprise?  This sensibility is a critical factor in this strategic plan for social endowment program.

 

SECI envisions that more diversified wealth creation, if achieved, can improve a sense of personal, family, and community wellness, as well as reducing social disruptions now flaring in democracies.   And perhaps play a role in vitalizing capitalism at a critical time in world history.   The SEED Program is inspired by the “Giving Pledge” initiative created by Warren Buffett and Bill and Melinda Gates, where high net worth individuals pledge more than half of their wealth to charitable causes either during their lives or in their wills.   However, the SEED Program takes a different approach, where constituent shareholders have a stake in an entrepreneurial for-profit enterprise at its outset creating a shared outlook for a community’s future. Whereas the “Giving Pledge” is a private decision to distribute wealth after its accumulation. The Seed Program seeks to build shared values and a new mindset, a new form of charitable donation.

 

The strategic plan for social endowment program included a detailed action plan for jump starting participation among strategic partners and interested communities.   Part of the plan also addressed select strategic marketing considerations in connection with the program launch, initially focused on leading family offices around the world where ESG Investing is finding a constituency.

 

SECI is headquartered in Toronto with affiliates and partners globally. SECI brings an innovative model of social entrepreneurship that is unique in design and comprehensive in coverage of the global social entrepreneurship sector.

 

 

Strategic Plan for Social Endowment Program

 

A Code for Age-Appropriate Design of Digital Experiences, is now in Effect in the UK

AEC’s Consumer Products Monitor

 

At a time when consumer privacy concerns are increasing around the world, the UK has emerged with a new code for children’s digital experiences.   The ICO (the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office) has created the Age Appropriate Design Code, which comes into force from today, with a 12 month transition period.   The Age Appropriate Design Code is intended to protect children, and is aimed at designers and developers of online services and products.  The code is a set of 15 standards that these designers should follow so as to comply with the data protection law, and includes things like making sure the privacy settings are set to ‘high’ by default.

 

According to the ICO website, ” … Data sits at the heart of the digital services children use every day. From the moment a young person opens an app, plays a game or loads a website, data begins to be gathered. Who’s using the service? How are they using it? How frequently? Where from? On what device?   For all the benefits the digital economy can offer children, we are not currently creating a safe space for them to learn, explore and play.   This statutory code of practice looks to change that, not by seeking to protect children from the digital world, but by protecting them within it.”

 

The ICO office provides details about the new code on its website at:  Age appropriate design: a code of practice for online services

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